We use cookies on this site to provide you with an informative and engaging experience and also to help us to continually improve our site for you. Without allowing cookies certain features of the site will not be available. To learn more about how we use cookies, please view our cookie policy. By clicking on ‘I AGREE’, you consent to our use of cookies on this device in accordance with our policy.

Logo of Wolters Kluwer, Kluwer Law Online

Home > All journals > Intertax > 52(5) >

Tax Incentives and Private Saving in Sub-Saharan Africa: Using Taxation to Incentivize Saving

Cover image ofIntertax

$25.00 - Rental (PDF) *

$49.00 - Article (PDF) *

*service fee may apply
Tax Incentives and Private Saving in Sub-Saharan Africa: Using Taxation to Incentivize Saving


Intertax
Volume 52, Issue 5 (2024) pp. 412 – 433

https://doi.org/10.54648/taxi2024040



Abstract

Tax-based saving promotion programs are gaining global attention as a means of mobilizing funds for domestic investment, increasing employment levels, and consequently generating greater economic growth. Despite this, such programs have remained an exception in Sub-Saharan Africa. Whereas the study of saving promotion schemes in the region has been of high interest, no attempts have been made to study how tax policy could be used to augment these efforts. This article contributes to alleviating this deficiency by linking saving promotion schemes with tax policy. The authors use descriptive statistics of region- and country-specific data to assess Sub-Saharan Africa’s private saving landscape and its current use of tax incentives. Through a systematic literature analysis, the article reveals heterogeneous challenges to private saving in the region subsequently leading to inherently low saving levels. Consequently, tax-policy interventions to boost savings in the region remain impractical, especially if the region’s current political economy, business, and demographic environment remain the same. The key barriers to private saving are evaluated, and multidimensional policy suggestions are made for improving the use of tax-based incentives. While the policy recommendations have been specifically tailored for Sub-Saharan Africa’s local socioeconomic circumstances, some of them may apply well to other low-middle-income countries (LMIC) that share similar or related characteristics.


Keywords

Sub-Saharan Africa, tax incentives, savings promotion, tax-free savings accounts, low-income countries, tax-based private savings schemes, tax policy


Extract




Subscribe to this journal

Interested in a subscription? Contact our sales team

Contribute to this journal

Go Directly to PeerEase! Submit Article

Browse by practice area
Share
Stay up to date


RSSETOC